Pathology - Thrombosis And Embolism Flashcards

1
Q

Define thrombosis

A

The formation of a solid mass of blood within the circulatory system

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2
Q

Give some reasons why thrombosis may occur

A
  • abnormalities of the vessel wall (atheroma, direct injury, inflammation)
  • abnormalities of blood flow (stagnation, turbulence)
  • abnormalities of blood components (smokers, post-partum, post-op)
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3
Q

How do arterial thrombi appear?

A

Pale, granular, have “lines of Zahn”, lower cell content

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4
Q

How do venous thrombi appear?

A

Soft, gelatinous, deep red colour, higher cell content

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5
Q

What does lysis of a thrombus involve?

A
  • Complete dissolution of the thrombus
  • fibrinolytic system active
  • blood flow re-established
  • most likely when thrombi are small
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6
Q

What does propagation of a thrombus involve?

A
  • Progressive spread of thrombosis

- thrombus moves distally in arteries, proximally in veins (towards heart)

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7
Q

What is ‘organisation’ of a thrombus?

A

A reparative process which leads to ingrowth of fibroblasts and capillaries (similar to granulation tissue). The lumen remains obstructed though

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8
Q

What is ‘recanalisation’ of a thrombus?

A

One or more channels formed through organising thrombus. Blood flow is reestablished but usually incomplete.

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9
Q

How does thrombosis cause embolism?

A

Part of the thrombus breaks off, travels through the bloodstream and lodges at a different site.

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10
Q

What are the effects of arterial thrombosis?

A
  • ischaemia
  • infarction
  • other symptoms depend on site and collateral circulation
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11
Q

What are the effects of venous thrombosis?

A

Congestion, oedema, ischaemia, infarction

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12
Q

Define embolism

A

The blockage of a blood vessel by solid, liquid or gas at a site distant from its origin

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13
Q

What types of embolism are there?

A
  • thrombo-emboli (these have broken off from a thrombus)
  • air
  • amniotic fluid
  • nitrogen
  • medical equipment
  • tumour cells
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14
Q

Where do emboli from systemic veins go?

A

They pass to the lungs and become pulmonary emboli

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15
Q

Where do emboli from the heart go?

A

Pass via the aorta to renal, mesenteric and other arteries

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16
Q

Where do emboli from an atheromatous carotid artery go?

A

Pass to the brain

17
Q

Where do emboli from atheromatous abdominal aorta of?

A

To arteries of legs

18
Q

Give some predisposing factors to deep vein thrombosis

A
  • immobility/bed rest
  • post-operative
  • pregnancy and post-part up
  • oral contraceptives
  • severe burns
  • cardiac failure
  • disseminated cancer
19
Q

How can the risk of deep vein thrombosis be reduced?

A

Apply stockings with graduated pressure which compress veins, or wear ‘Flowtron’ boots which intermittently inflate, mimicking muscle pump of the calf.

20
Q

Can deep vein thrombosis be treated?

A

It cannot be cured, the thrombus can be prevented from growing by using intravenous heparin type drugs then switching to oral warfarin

21
Q

What are the effects of pulmonary embolism?

A

Three grades of severity:

  • massive PE (more than 60% reduction in blood flow) is rapidly fatal
  • major PE (medium sized vessels blocked), patients short of breath, may have a cough and blood stained sputum
  • minor PE (small peripheral pulmonary arteries blocked), asymptomatic or minor shortness of breath
22
Q

What is a cerebral embolism?

A

Condition in which an embolus blocks blood flow through the vessels of the cerebrum, resulting in tissue ischaemia distal to the occlusion

23
Q

What is fat embolism?

A

An embolus made up of fatty acids which becomes lodged in a blood vessel and causes ischaemia